Damn Fine Story: Mastering the Tools of a Powerful Narrative by Chuck Wendig
The
poet Miya Angelou once remarked that people won’t necessarily remember what you
said or how you said it, “but they will always remember how you made them
feel.” The most memorable stories, Chuck Wendig insists, are the stories that
make us feel. A good story can also make us think, and, quite possibly,
entertain us along the way. But the way it makes us feel is
paramount. This may well be why so many
badly-written books routinely make it to the best-seller list: whatever we may
think about an author’s adolescent mangling of the English language, their
torturously limited vocabulary, or the utter dearth of style in their stories,
those stories managed to make readers feel something—and, rightly or wrongly,
that trumps good grammar and proper spelling any day of the week. But it
doesn’t always have to be that way; good writers can become better
storytellers, and that is the aim and thrust of this fascinating and extremely
useful new book. In Damn Fine Story Wendig lays out the elements of
effective, powerful, thought-provoking, memorable storytelling—not writing per
se, but storytelling, whether through books, movies, comics, or games—often
with a surprising depth of detail, in a fresh, engaging, sometimes-salty style,
never too far above our heads, but invariably enlightening.
Like
so many others, I became aware of Chuck Wendig through the insightful, often
breezy and hilarious postings on his blog, terribleminds, which has become a
regular on-line destination for many writers today. I picked up Wendig’s book
shortly after finishing two other exceptional volumes on writing; John McPhee’s
superb Draft Nr. 4, which deals with the craft and technique of
‘creative nonfiction’, and Benjamin Percy’s Thrill Me: Essays on Fiction, a
brilliant, paradigm-shifting discussion of dramatic fiction that cannot be
recommended highly enough. Insights gained from McPhee and Percy dovetailed
beautifully with the ideas and concepts in Wendig’s book and reinforced them at
a deep level. As a novelist and traditionally-published author of short
fiction, I found myself referencing my own work-in-progress to discussions and
examples in Damn Fine Story and this was immensely helpful! Following
Wendig’s lead, I went back and chopped out a great deal of inessential material
in my current novel, while working to tighten up the threads that bind the
story together. This, for me, was worth the price of the book, along with
Wendig’s 50 Storytelling Tips at the back, a concise summation of his
many invaluable lessons.
We’ve
all heard that old chestnut, “write what you know.” But that’s really a rather
nebulous and silly, if not completely meaningless, piece of advice. Instead,
Wendig exhorts us to “write what you understand… Write who you are… We are at
our best as storytellers when who we are…helps to inform the stories we write.”
And
what goes into writing or telling a great story? Wendig lays out six concise
rules—more like guidelines—to help us understand the process. Stories begin
with change, for “storytelling is an act of interrupting the status quo…a push
between order and chaos, a battle between oxygen and the fire that consumes
it.” The best stories are not about events, but about characters: “Between the
character’s problem and the character’s solution to that problem lies the
story” and it is “the small story [that] always matters more than the big
story.”
How
do we raise the stakes in a story? How do we create conflict and build tension that will compel and thrill an audience? Ask questions! “Conflict
is, in itself, a form of question. Implicit in every conflict, in every breach
of the status quo, are a bundle of uncertainties…” And questions keep an
audience hungry—“always hungry but never starved.” Wendig gives us no fewer
than thirty-three building blocks of narrative tension in a chapter that’s
nothing short of a didactic tour de force! Along the way, he often illustrates
his points with reference to several of the best-known examples of great
cinematic storytelling; the first Die Hard film, Star Wars (the
original trilogy in particular), The Princess Bride, and The Hunger
Games. While Wendig’s constant reliance on the same material becomes a tad
monotonous in spots, it is invariably to a valuable end. It’s when he goes off
in a more obscure direction that things aren’t quite so clear—honestly! How
many people even remember the rather ponderous film adaptation of The Last
Airbender? (That movie certainly failed to make me feel anything.)
Of
particular interest to me as a writer of erotic fiction were Wendig’s many
practical insights into the narrative potential of sex—which ought to be
studied and taken to heart by every aspiring author of literary fiction coming
up today! “A scene of sex or violence,” Wendig tells us, “doesn’t stop a
character from being who they are, it reveals it… The great thing about
sex as a driver of tension is that so many outcomes are possible…” Sex “is
ultimately about characters, and about the tension of what happens when you
smush [characters] together…”
Sex,
violence, taboo and transgression are all deeply rooted in character and all
highly effective catalysts for conflict, tension and story. “Every interaction
between two characters…works in similar ways… A fight scene and a love scene
are a kind of conversation, and they follow similar rules.”
That’s
music to my ears! And these are only a few of the great insights to be found in
Damn Fine Story. Chuck Wendig has clearly thought deeply about the
elements of his craft, and that works out wonderfully for us, too!
Enthusiastically
recommended.
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